Well i watched each and every single Futurama episode. Loved the series in whole. It had its up and downs. Last nights episode, The Finale, was a decent close to it. Little sentimental, little corny and still funny.

Sad to see it go but it was time, maybe time a season back but a good wrap up.

__________________
If you are reading this either you are really bored or just have no life! :)

In a way, there will be one more episode - a crossover with The Simpsons. I think it's planned to be the 2014-15 Simpsons season premiere (not to be confused with the Simpsons/Family Guy crossover that's planned for Family Guy, either at the end of the upcoming season or the start of the 2014-15 one).

Also, I wouldn't be too surprised if Fox is considering bringing it back in, say, January of 2015, in case Murder Police (assuming it's still called that) crashes and burns and there's a hole in the Sunday night schedule (since American Dad is moving to TBS after this season).

__________________"I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
"Stop slouching! It's two O'clock in the afternoon, PUT PANTS ON!"
"Statistically speaking, there are two Popes per square kilometer in Vatican City..."

Nice of Comedy Central to "play along" with the storyline, immediately following the finale with a rerun of the first episode.

But I thought Professor Farnsworth said it would only send everyone back to just before he invented the time button - not all the way back to December 31, 1999.

Speaking of time...if it has been 13 years, then why isn't Hermes' son Dwight in his 20s by now?

Also, if you count the Futurama Video Game, we know how everything ends:

Spoiler:

Mom buys Planet Express, which gives her ownership of 51% of the entire planet; Professor Farnsworth ends up in a head in a jar, and Fry, Leela, and Bender are all crushed to death when one of Mom's giant robots falls on them.

To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 10 or greater. You currently have 0 posts. | To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 10 or greater. You currently have 0 posts.

But I thought Professor Farnsworth said it would only send everyone back to just before he invented the time button - not all the way back to December 31, 1999.

Technically he said it would send everyone back to the moment he first conceived of the button. Borrowing a page from Back to the Future, that could easily be any time well before he walks into the room and introduces his new invention to everyone.

Fry, naturally, goes back to the "beginning" because he's possibly not yet entered the Professor's timeline when the Professor first thinks of it. Realistically, that means that he'd go back to sometime in the middle of being frozen, but from a narrative standpoint that makes no sense. If we follow Fry's perceptions and the loop starts while he is still frozen, then there's no reason not to tack back on the immediate situation pre-freezing that would be vividly in his memory.

At least The Simpsons changes its own past to fit the chronology (for example, a relatively recent episode has Marge attending college in the early 1990s before getting pregnant with Bart, even though an episode from early in the show's run says that Bart was born in 1981.

What Futurama did was similar to a recent Family Guy episode where Brian and Stewie go back in time 10 years and meet themselves, despite the fact that neither of them were alive 10 years ago.

To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 10 or greater. You currently have 0 posts. | To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 10 or greater. You currently have 0 posts.